Gluck: Don Juan (ballet music); Handel: Ariodante & Il Pastor Fido (ballet music)


Gluck: Don Juan (ballet music); Handel: Ariodante & Il Pastor Fido (ballet music)
Neville Marriner
Label
Decca
Catalogue No.
4762440
Barcode
00028947624400
Format
1-CD
About

These rarities of sprightly, energetic and utterly charming music make a welcome return to the catalogue at budget price. A contemporary reaction to the first production is found in the diary of Count Zinzendorf, who found the subject ‘…extremely sad, lugubrious and frightening… Hell appears, furies dance with lighted torches and torment Don Juan; in the background a splendid firework represents hellfire. Devils are seen flying. The ballet goes on a long time; at last the devils carry Don Juan away and leap with him into the flaming pit. All this was excellently done, the music being very fine.’

Gluck’s autographed score has not survived, but it would seem that the 1761 production contained many fewer musical numbers than the 31 which appeared in the published score and are recorded here. The couplings here from ‘Ariodante’ and ‘Il pastor Fido’ (The Faithful Shepherd) were cornerstone of Sir Thomas Beecham’s so-called ‘lollipops’ and are beautifully rendered here. The recordings represent some of the Academy/Marriner’s earliest, dating from 1967 (Gluck) and 1971 (Handel).

TRACK LISTING / ARTISTS

CHRISTOPH WILLIBALD GLUCK
Don Juan:
Sinfonia
Act I
Act II
Act III
Act IV

GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL
Ariodante:
Ouverture
Sinfonia pastorale. Ballo

Il Pastor Fido:
March: Air pour les chasseurs I & II

Academy of St. Martin in the Fields
Neville Marriner

Recording information

Recording producers: Erik Smith (Gluck); Michael Bremner (Handel)
Recording engineers: Michael Mailes (Gluck); Stanley Goodall (Handel)
Recording location: Decca Studios No. 3, West Hampstead, London, May 1967 (Gluck), 1971 (Handel)

Reviews

‘stylish playing … the faster dances are bouncy and energetic’ MusicWeb

‘These two highly attractive suites are played with grace and fine rhythmic point by Marriner and his splendid orchestral group. A fine bonus for the superb Gluck ballet, with vintage Argo (1971) sound’ *** Penguin Guide